Signup date: 04 Aug 2011 at 10:07pm
Last login: 10 Sep 2013 at 12:15am
Post count: 108
Yikes, MissPiggy! I have not heard of this happening in the UK since the early 1990s, so thought everyone was now enlightened (naive, I know). Not exactly a motivation to publish, then ... :-(
======= Date Modified 11 Jan 2012 23:03:56 =======
I agree too; it seems fair enough, particularly since the new co-authors were involved in the data collection, without which there would be no publication. If your supervisor is well-known and well-respected, you may even gain some kudos by association. Most people will read between the lines of a list of co-authors and know who has done most of the work!
Until relatively recently it was accepted that supervisors had the right to be named as the sole author of publications researched and written by their students, simply hijacking the whole thing. There were a not inconsiderable number of widely-published professors who never put pen to paper, simply resting on their laurels and claiming - perfectly legally - the fruits of their research students' labour. At least those days have gone!
Hi Beajay
I do a lot of doctoral thesis copy editing (though not from a jobs Ebay: sounds like a great idea!), so I come across a lot of university style and presentation guides. Never met this one, though! It rather sounds as if a control freak ninny has got themselves the job of drafting the requirements. For what it's worth, I would go with whatever bloody stupid format is required and advise my client that this is extremely odd; if criticised they can point to the guidelines and add that 'it did seem an unusual choice, but ...'!
On an even more cynical note, I sometimes wonder if anyone (including and especially the students and the supervisors) ever read the guidelines anyway. Many have to contact their graduate office for a copy ... after three or five years of research and writing. :$
Good luck with it!
P.
Hey, Ady - a star! Thank you! Best of luck with the rest of your final tweaks.
P.
According to Fowler & Fowler (authors of "The King's English" and honorary patron saints of English grammar) either is acceptable, although the first option is more accurate. Good choice! ;-)
Might there be a record of registration with the General Teaching Council for Scotland (or England, depending on where you taught?)
Hi swetchha
How about "this quote is understandabubbleawobble [understandable] despite the typing mistakes"? This approach is fairly standard, I think.
P.
I have only found typos quantified in one doctoral handbook, which requires that:
"The text has been carefully checked ... complete elimination of such errors is very difficult,
and insertion of a few corrections at a later stage is usually allowed ... but more than one error per page is not considered acceptable".
At which (being an editor) I almost choked!
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